6 Papers
Yanan Li is an academic researcher from China Meteorological Administration. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aerosol & Chemistry. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications. Previous affiliations of Yanan Li include Beijing Normal University.
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Papers
Impacts of organic aerosols and its oxidation level on CCN activity from measurement at a suburban site in China
Fang Zhang,Zhanqing Li,Zhanqing Li,Yanan Li,Yele Sun,Zhenzhu Wang,Ping Li,Li Sun,Pucai Wang,Maureen Cribb,Chuanfeng Zhao,Tianyi Fan,Xin Yang,Qingqing Wang +13 more
TL;DR: In this article, the impacts of organic aerosols on cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) activity based on field measurements made at a suburban site in Northern China were examined.
Growth rates of fine aerosol particles at a site near Beijing in June 2013
TL;DR: Wang et al. as discussed by the authors investigated the growth of fine aerosol particles during the Aerosol-CCN-Cloud Closure Experiment campaign in June 2013 at an urban site near Beijing.
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Influences of aerosol physiochemical properties and new particle formation on CCN activity from observation at a suburban site of China
Yanan Li,Fang Zhang,Zhanqing Li,Zhanqing Li,Li Sun,Zhenzhu Wang,Ping Li,Yele Sun,Jingye Ren,Yuying Wang,Maureen Cribb,Cheng Yuan +11 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of aerosol particle size and chemical composition on CCN activity was investigated at five different supersaturations (SS) ranging from 0.075% to 0.76%.
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Measurement report: The effect of aerosol chemical composition on light scattering due to the hygroscopic swelling effect
Rongmin Ren,Zhanqing Li,P. Yan,Yuying Wang,Hao Wu,Maureen Cribb,Wei Wang,Xiaoai Jin,Yanan Li,Dongmei Zhang +9 more
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of liquid water in aerosol particles has a significant effect on their optical properties, especially on light scattering, whose dependence on chemical composition is investigated using measurements made in southern Beijing in 2019.
The large proportion of black carbon (BC)-containing aerosols in the urban atmosphere.
TL;DR: A large amount of aerosols are BC-containing particles, with mass fraction of 32-52%, suggesting the dominant role of BC in elevating mass concentration of particulate matter (PM) in a polluted urban area.